Mrs Smoker
Full Member
It is a picture from the times of racism incident, @Sky1981 .
A little perspective perhaps ? Though due to the tribal nature of football it's maybe asking too much. It was a weird, idiotic, unbelievable (this after all being the World Cup) and frankly totally insane act and fully deserving of a substantial ban and fine, there simply can be no defence, he doesn't deserve it. He didn't though eat a baby (though some say he would given the chance) or add cyanide to the aquifer. Therefore this makes interesting reading after the initial shock :
http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/...k-value-and-get-some-perspective-9563690.html
[article=[url]http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/worldcup/luis-suarez-bite-lets-move-past-the-shock-value-and-get-some-perspective-9563690.html]Luis[/url] Suarez bite: Let’s move past the shock value and get some perspective
Glenn Moore
Danny Mills would send him to jail, Alan Shearer would ban him worldwide for “as long as I could”, which under Fifa statutes is two years. What heinous crime could Luis Suarez have committed to prompt such a response from two players who were not exactly shrinking violets on the field?
He bit someone.
He did not fix a match, which strikes at the very heart of sport. He did not use performance-enhancing drugs, which is the most insidious form of cheating. He did not go over the top and break an opponent’s leg, or shatter an opponent’s nose or cheekbone with an elbow. He did not attack a referee (he has done that, head-butting an official, but that was 11 years ago when he was playing youth team football at 16 and he received a long ban).
In my mind these are all worse acts than biting an opponent, especially given it was in the heat of the moment, and he did not pursue the act long enough to draw blood.
What he did was disgusting and horrible, sets a terrible example and would be deeply unpleasant to be a victim of. But Giorgio Chiellini played on. If Suarez had broken his leg with a reckless, even premeditated tackle (it happens) he would have been out until Christmas.
Suarez needs psychiatric help, not a jail sentence. He deserves to be banned, ideally for the duration of the World Cup with a longer sentence suspended on condition he has professional treatment, but is his offence really deserving of a longer ban than a player who has threatened the livelihood of another? It is the shock value, and the recidivism, which has accounted for the publicity and outrage.
There is also, clearly, a cultural issue. In Italy, according to a SkyItalia reporter, they are more interested in assessing who is to blame for the Azzurri being out of the World Cup at the group stage (Mario Balotelli appears to be receiving more blame than Suarez). In Brazil the incident seems to be regarded as comedy rather than horror.
In England, however, Suarez is beyond the pale. Diving, biting, cheating: he fits our stereotype of the South American footballing bad guy, the latest in a long line stretching back past Diego Maradona to Antonio Rattin. There is also a place, it should be said, for lovable South Americans, such as Ossie Ardiles, Gus Poyet, and all things Brazilian.
And yet, if the behaviour of Uruguayan Suarez is so reprehensible, how is it Dylan Hartley is still being picked for England’s rugby union team? The hooker was banned for eight weeks for biting the finger of Ireland’s Steven Ferris in a Six Nations international in 2012 – and a finger is rather more vulnerable than a shoulder. Nor was it his first, or last, offence. In 2007 Hartley was banned for six months for eye gouging, which, considering the possible consequences, is far worse than nibbling on a shoulder. He was also banned for punching an opponent and for abusing a referee. Last week this serial offender started for England against New Zealand, his 56th cap. No one seemed to be outraged.[/article]
A little perspective perhaps ? Though due to the tribal nature of football it's maybe asking too much. It was a weird, idiotic, unbelievable (this after all being the World Cup) and frankly totally insane act and fully deserving of a substantial ban and fine, there simply can be no defence, he doesn't deserve it. He didn't though eat a baby (though some say he would given the chance) or add cyanide to the aquifer. Therefore this makes interesting reading after the initial shock :
http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/...k-value-and-get-some-perspective-9563690.html
[article=[url]http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/worldcup/luis-suarez-bite-lets-move-past-the-shock-value-and-get-some-perspective-9563690.html]Luis[/url] Suarez bite: Let’s move past the shock value and get some perspective
Glenn Moore
Danny Mills would send him to jail, Alan Shearer would ban him worldwide for “as long as I could”, which under Fifa statutes is two years. What heinous crime could Luis Suarez have committed to prompt such a response from two players who were not exactly shrinking violets on the field?
He bit someone.
He did not fix a match, which strikes at the very heart of sport. He did not use performance-enhancing drugs, which is the most insidious form of cheating. He did not go over the top and break an opponent’s leg, or shatter an opponent’s nose or cheekbone with an elbow. He did not attack a referee (he has done that, head-butting an official, but that was 11 years ago when he was playing youth team football at 16 and he received a long ban).
In my mind these are all worse acts than biting an opponent, especially given it was in the heat of the moment, and he did not pursue the act long enough to draw blood.
What he did was disgusting and horrible, sets a terrible example and would be deeply unpleasant to be a victim of. But Giorgio Chiellini played on. If Suarez had broken his leg with a reckless, even premeditated tackle (it happens) he would have been out until Christmas.
Suarez needs psychiatric help, not a jail sentence. He deserves to be banned, ideally for the duration of the World Cup with a longer sentence suspended on condition he has professional treatment, but is his offence really deserving of a longer ban than a player who has threatened the livelihood of another? It is the shock value, and the recidivism, which has accounted for the publicity and outrage.
There is also, clearly, a cultural issue. In Italy, according to a SkyItalia reporter, they are more interested in assessing who is to blame for the Azzurri being out of the World Cup at the group stage (Mario Balotelli appears to be receiving more blame than Suarez). In Brazil the incident seems to be regarded as comedy rather than horror.
In England, however, Suarez is beyond the pale. Diving, biting, cheating: he fits our stereotype of the South American footballing bad guy, the latest in a long line stretching back past Diego Maradona to Antonio Rattin. There is also a place, it should be said, for lovable South Americans, such as Ossie Ardiles, Gus Poyet, and all things Brazilian.
And yet, if the behaviour of Uruguayan Suarez is so reprehensible, how is it Dylan Hartley is still being picked for England’s rugby union team? The hooker was banned for eight weeks for biting the finger of Ireland’s Steven Ferris in a Six Nations international in 2012 – and a finger is rather more vulnerable than a shoulder. Nor was it his first, or last, offence. In 2007 Hartley was banned for six months for eye gouging, which, considering the possible consequences, is far worse than nibbling on a shoulder. He was also banned for punching an opponent and for abusing a referee. Last week this serial offender started for England against New Zealand, his 56th cap. No one seemed to be outraged.[/article]
He's also a really really good lawyer.
So they're actually going with the 'he didn't do anything' defence?
5 year olds all over the world with chocolate around their mouths soon learn that 'I didn't touch the biscuits' doesn't work.
What the feck is wrong with these idiots?
Please share the better defence you would produce. Throwing him under the bus is not an option so all you can do is clutch at straws and hope to delay long enough. We already have exhibit 1 Sakho's elbow against Ecuador, which may well have proved the difference for Ecuador and not Switzerland going through.
If you are going to engage in retrospective punishment you have to do it across the board, surely.
Please share the better defence you would produce. Throwing him under the bus is not an option so all you can do is clutch at straws and hope to delay long enough. We already have exhibit 1 Sakho's elbow against Ecuador, which may well have proved the difference for Ecuador and not Switzerland going through.
If you are going to engage in retrospective punishment you have to do it across the board, surely.
I'm quite sure he would do any of the above if it meant winning a game of footy. Maybe he wouldn't rape Jesus, but that would be because IF Jesus ever existed, he probably had dark skin. That would put him in a spot of conflict..."Shall I rape him for the good of my nation or would that weaken my rascist point of view?"Let's have some perspective, he didn't push a disabled pregnant woman out of a window, he didn't rape Jesus, he didn't steal the U.S. gold supply from Fort Knox to finance SMERSH. He actually deserves a medal for not doing these things.
Let's have some perspective, he didn't push a disabled pregnant woman out of a window, he didn't rape Jesus, he didn't steal the U.S. gold supply from Fort Knox to finance SMERSH. He actually deserves a medal for not doing these things.
Please share the better defence you would produce. Throwing him under the bus is not an option so all you can do is clutch at straws and hope to delay long enough. We already have exhibit 1 Sakho's elbow against Ecuador, which may well have proved the difference for Ecuador and not Switzerland going through.
If you are going to engage in retrospective punishment you have to do it across the board, surely.
In England, however, Suarez is beyond the pale. Diving, biting, cheating: he fits our stereotype of the South American footballing bad guy, the latest in a long line stretching back past Diego Maradona to Antonio Rattin. There is also a place, it should be said, for lovable South Americans, such as Ossie Ardiles, Gus Poyet, and all things Brazilian.
Read again, they are relevant sports examples. I was bitten on a regular basis playing rugby in England. I just got on with it and never had an infection or some of the dreadful outcomes all the experts here go on about.
He is still an idiot, mind.
Read again, they are relevant sports examples. I was bitten on a regular basis playing rugby in England. I just got on with it and never had an infection or some of the dreadful outcomes all the experts here go on about.
He is still an idiot, mind.
You are like a mildly saner version of Uruguay FA. Only a shade though. This isn't Werewolf games Anto.
A little perspective perhaps ? Though due to the tribal nature of football it's maybe asking too much. It was a weird, idiotic, unbelievable (this after all being the World Cup) and frankly totally insane act and fully deserving of a substantial ban and fine, there simply can be no defence, he doesn't deserve it. He didn't though eat a baby (though some say he would given the chance) or add cyanide to the aquifer. Therefore this makes interesting reading after the initial shock :
http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/...k-value-and-get-some-perspective-9563690.html
[article=[url]http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/worldcup/luis-suarez-bite-lets-move-past-the-shock-value-and-get-some-perspective-9563690.html]Luis[/url] Suarez bite: Let’s move past the shock value and get some perspective
Glenn Moore
Danny Mills would send him to jail, Alan Shearer would ban him worldwide for “as long as I could”, which under Fifa statutes is two years. What heinous crime could Luis Suarez have committed to prompt such a response from two players who were not exactly shrinking violets on the field?
He bit someone.
He did not fix a match, which strikes at the very heart of sport. He did not use performance-enhancing drugs, which is the most insidious form of cheating. He did not go over the top and break an opponent’s leg, or shatter an opponent’s nose or cheekbone with an elbow. He did not attack a referee (he has done that, head-butting an official, but that was 11 years ago when he was playing youth team football at 16 and he received a long ban).
In my mind these are all worse acts than biting an opponent, especially given it was in the heat of the moment, and he did not pursue the act long enough to draw blood.
What he did was disgusting and horrible, sets a terrible example and would be deeply unpleasant to be a victim of. But Giorgio Chiellini played on. If Suarez had broken his leg with a reckless, even premeditated tackle (it happens) he would have been out until Christmas.
Suarez needs psychiatric help, not a jail sentence. He deserves to be banned, ideally for the duration of the World Cup with a longer sentence suspended on condition he has professional treatment, but is his offence really deserving of a longer ban than a player who has threatened the livelihood of another? It is the shock value, and the recidivism, which has accounted for the publicity and outrage.
There is also, clearly, a cultural issue. In Italy, according to a SkyItalia reporter, they are more interested in assessing who is to blame for the Azzurri being out of the World Cup at the group stage (Mario Balotelli appears to be receiving more blame than Suarez). In Brazil the incident seems to be regarded as comedy rather than horror.
In England, however, Suarez is beyond the pale. Diving, biting, cheating: he fits our stereotype of the South American footballing bad guy, the latest in a long line stretching back past Diego Maradona to Antonio Rattin. There is also a place, it should be said, for lovable South Americans, such as Ossie Ardiles, Gus Poyet, and all things Brazilian.
And yet, if the behaviour of Uruguayan Suarez is so reprehensible, how is it Dylan Hartley is still being picked for England’s rugby union team? The hooker was banned for eight weeks for biting the finger of Ireland’s Steven Ferris in a Six Nations international in 2012 – and a finger is rather more vulnerable than a shoulder. Nor was it his first, or last, offence. In 2007 Hartley was banned for six months for eye gouging, which, considering the possible consequences, is far worse than nibbling on a shoulder. He was also banned for punching an opponent and for abusing a referee. Last week this serial offender started for England against New Zealand, his 56th cap. No one seemed to be outraged.[/article]
As I've said before on this thread, I don't think psychiatric intervention would make any difference because he doesn't accept that biting someone is wrong.
Why does he talk about England and Italy/Brazil and it being a cultural issue? It's implied we should almost be embarrassed by finding biting someone disgusting because they don't mind it.
One thing is for sure; the English media has a lot to answer for in the case of the Italian bitten by a Uruguayan in a match that took place with a Mexican referee in Brazil over who goes on to face Colombia in the next round that will be decided by a disciplinary panel chaired by a man from Switzerland
You do realise you are quoting The Independent and not me don't you ? You do know it was an article that you just read ?He is all that. Its not the stereotype, he is a cheatling, lying, racist, biting, crazy, dirty tackling bastard.
And other countries regarding that as comedy is just bollocks. You're using the same defense as his lawyers - evil British press is out to get poor Suarez..
You do realise you are quoting The Independent and not me don't you ? You do know it was an article that you just read ?
Yeah, so?
Realised it just now tbh.
JUst had a quick look,didnt see its an article.
Yeah, Ecuador were on course for getting a 2-0 win against France before that.
But that notion is surely countered by the fact that there are plenty of Uruguayans playing in leagues all around the world and no others display this trait.It seems there are a lot of people who don't see it as wrong and that big of a deal, going by some of the responses in this thread alone I wouldn't be surprised if biting was acceptable and widespread in some countries, similar to racism.
This then leads on to a lot more questions, not just about Suarez but those countries who don't mind it.
One thing is for sure; the English media has a lot to answer for in the case of the Italian bitten by a Uruguayan in a match that took place with a Mexican referee in Brazil over who goes on to face Colombia in the next round that will be decided by a disciplinary panel chaired by a man from Switzerland
Nope, but let's not get ridiculous with 'this might have cost Ecuador a place in the last 16'. It didn't, certainly not to an extent to which referee's bad decisions have swung the game from a draw to Uruguay win.Maybe, maybe not. It was much much earlier in the game. Either way, it's still an assault on another player.
Are you condoning elbowing now?
Yea, you're right, when seen on multiple camera angles by the whole world committing an offence the only possible response is to say you didn't do it.Please share the better defence you would produce. Throwing him under the bus is not an option so all you can do is clutch at straws and hope to delay long enough. We already have exhibit 1 Sakho's elbow against Ecuador, which may well have proved the difference for Ecuador and not Switzerland going through.
If you are going to engage in retrospective punishment you have to do it across the board, surely.
So 15:30 here, just after lunch.